I can say with certainty that the person who destroyed the ticket would have been injured. Whether it is law enforcement in Nevada or the thugs on the streets of the town I work in, I have a very low tolerance for BS. Just ask One eyed Dick. I will always respond in an appropriate manner.

Those who think they can and those who think they can't are both right.

I think I'd not easily restrain myself from doing something I would later regret. A little... maybe. I think the tear-orist would not like the reaction to his (or her) action. Let me explain...

- - -

Having received so-called "gift" tickets as a so-called "volunteer" for the org I can assure you that those gift tix aren't free by a long shot. Bull you say?

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Lessee... minimum of 40 hours, plus I did a 24 hour on-call shift, and wsas there pre- and post-event. No drinking before or during the shift, plus being as if I was at my 51 week a year job (with the same or harder rules). No dope. No shenanigans. Follow ALL the rules. ALL the time. Bustin' my butt. Even figuring minimum wage at 7.25 (and my skillset gets a hell of a lot more than minimum on the outside), x 64 hours? I paid... at least $464.00 for that ticket. It's cheaper to buy a ticket. Really no shit cheaper. Plus I get to enjoy the event, and not watch a clock... or my manners.

So, while it may not be politically correct to espouse this, I got no problem with someone selling their $460+ dollar "Gift" ticket. When I was flush, I'd buy a ticket and gift the "Gift", but I got burned once doing that (long story, the giftee ended up pissing off a lot of people) so usually I use it or, if I don't. I save it as a souvineer. If someone is GENUINELY hard up and otherwise fucked... then I think about it.

But it's MY ticket. I EARNED the bastard. Dig? Not yours to tell me how holy I should be to live YOUR rules. I busted MY ass while you went out and played to get that gift that I could gift off. Or keep. Or, fuck, sell if I had to (tho I've yet to sell that ticket, and if I did I'd never tell anyone). I'd never get the $1400 that ticket cost ME. YOU do the work, then YOU say how that ticket gets done.

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Sorry, I do get a little defensive about that issue. Just a wee bit, maybe??

Bay Bridge Sue wrote:I think I'd not easily restrain myself from doing something I would later regret. A little... maybe. I think the tear-orist would not like the reaction to his (or her) action. Let me explain...

- - -

Having received so-called "gift" tickets as a so-called "volunteer" for the org I can assure you that those gift tix aren't free by a long shot. Bull you say?

(RantServ V 3.12 boot protocol initializing...)

Lessee... minimum of 40 hours, plus I did a 24 hour on-call shift, and wsas there pre- and post-event. No drinking before or during the shift, plus being as if I was at my 51 week a year job (with the same or harder rules). No dope. No shenanigans. Follow ALL the rules. ALL the time. Bustin' my butt. Even figuring minimum wage at 7.25 (and my skillset gets a hell of a lot more than minimum on the outside), x 64 hours? I paid... at least $464.00 for that ticket. It's cheaper to buy a ticket. Really no shit cheaper. Plus I get to enjoy the event, and not watch a clock... or my manners.

So, while it may not be politically correct to espouse this, I got no problem with someone selling their $460+ dollar "Gift" ticket. When I was flush, I'd buy a ticket and gift the "Gift", but I got burned once doing that (long story, the giftee ended up pissing off a lot of people) so usually I use it or, if I don't. I save it as a souvineer. If someone is GENUINELY hard up and otherwise fucked... then I think about it.

But it's MY ticket. I EARNED the bastard. Dig? Not yours to tell me how holy I should be to live YOUR rules. I busted MY ass while you went out and played to get that gift that I could gift off. Or keep. Or, fuck, sell if I had to (tho I've yet to sell that ticket, and if I did I'd never tell anyone). I'd never get the $1400 that ticket cost ME. YOU do the work, then YOU say how that ticket gets done.

RantServ shutdown protocol 2.06a3

Sorry, I do get a little defensive about that issue. Just a wee bit, maybe??

S.

I heaRT YOU, bAy briDGE Sue

FREE THE SHERPAS
Burners with torches is right and natural and just.-fishy.
CATCH AND RELEASE.

I think the engineer should have given the tickets back to the art project. We have a long list of people who have helped with our project and have easily put in what would be more than a ticket price worth of work that we do not have a ticket for. I am sure my projects are not the only ones that deal with this.

Does selling a gift ticket for an Honorarium project violate the agreement with the org? I thought it did.

fbcota wrote:I think the engineer should have given the tickets back to the art project. We have a long list of people who have helped with our project and have easily put in what would be more than a ticket price worth of work that we do not have a ticket for. I am sure my projects are not the only ones that deal with this.

Does selling a gift ticket for an Honorarium project violate the agreement with the org? I thought it did.

The engineer was not a team member of the project. He had his own firm and was chosen because he attends the Event and understood the dynamics involved of building structures on the Playa.
So, if I understand your position correctly, he should work for free because he had a death in the family and was unable to attend??

I am not attempting to be snarky, I want to make certain I understand your position correctly.

I have been involved with several Honorarium contracts, from the LLC side of the table. I have never seen anything about disposition of gift tickets. You are allowed to auction them at fund raisers, to raise money for the project.

I will read the next contract I see more carefully and report back.

Those who think they can and those who think they can't are both right.

Dustdevil: I think in those circumstances its fine. I have never been a big fan of contracts and absolutes. Each situation is different. I tend to apply what I said to 90% of the cases, I am sure there will always be cases that merit a different interpretation. I didn't want to sound like I was coming down on you, but it did :P.

Not all issues of right and wrong require a contractual obligation. The community has a right to decide and act as they see fit. Some people will do things I disagree with, and I will let them know. Some people may agree with me, and join in, others may object. Then we all talk about it. But jumping to the conclusion that if you don't like it you need to add a legal hurdle is a little extreme.